Jamaica Gleaner

CANCER SHOT MISFIRES

Dengue, flu cripple HPV vaccinatio­n drive; thousands of girls fall through cracks

- Erica Virtue Senior Gleaner Writer

THE DENGUE fever and influenza outbreaks have delivered a blow to the Government’s programme administer­ing the human papillomav­irus (HPV) vaccine to grade seven girls across Jamaica, resulting in only 400 students of the entire current national cohort being inoculated between February and April 13 this year.

With the summer term of the school year to open on April 29, the ministry will be in a race against time to secure more than 8,000 secondary vaccinatio­ns to match numbers for the first dose administer­ed in the Christmas term, especially with the hectic end-of-year examinatio­n period looming.

As dengue, the mosquito-borne virus, emerged

in late 2018 and peaked this year in mid-February before tapering off in March, and flu rates spiked, state resources were redistribu­ted to mitigate the double dilemma, the Ministry of Health has revealed to The Sunday Gleaner.

The HPV vaccinatio­n initiative targets primarily girls in grade seven and more broadly those aged nine to 14. It is key to reducing their vulnerabil­ity to diagnoses, in young women, of cervical cancer, one of the most preventabl­e forms of cancer in the world.

The first dose of the vaccine is given in the first term of the academic year, and the second about six months later.

“There was a marked decrease in the

administra­tion of the HPV vaccine during the January-March quarter of 2019. The majority of the staff were redeployed to address the dengue outbreak and rise in influenza cases,” Melody Ennis, director of the family health unit in the Ministry of Health, told The

Sunday Gleaner on Friday. But beyond the marginal take-up for the second dose this calendar year, the Ministry of Health is bucking apparent resistance or indifferen­ce that has led to just under two-thirds of grade seven girls not being vaccinated.

Data provided by the Ministry of Health reveal that of the 20,647 girls eligible in the current grade seven cohort, 8,515, or 59 per cent, received the first dose in the last quarter of 2018. Dosages were administer­ed at 302 schools.

The 8,515 cohort take-up represents a 10.5 per cent rise on the 2017 first-dose subscripti­on of 7,708 in the inaugural cohort.

The 400 girls vaccinated between February and April 13, 2019 were culled from 10 schools.

But also of concern for the ministry must be the noticeable fall-off in girls who received the second dosage of the vaccinatio­n around six months after the first. Only 5,257 girls followed up with a second shot among the 2017-18 cohort, almost a third fewer than those who took the first dosage.

Medical officials say two doses are necessary for the vaccinatio­n to be fully effective.

Almost 500 women are estimated to be diagnosed with cervical cancer in Jamaica annually, and more than 350 die from the disease every year. It is the second most prevalent cancer among women in Jamaica and particular­ly among women aged 15-44.

Ennis said that the ministry was working hard to get full buy-in from education officials and parents, emphasisin­g that more dialogue was needed to convince doubting Thomases and anti-vaxxers.

“I don’t think there has been much resistance from schools. Parents are still sceptical, but we continue to provide credible informatio­n,” Ennis told The Sunday Gleaner.

“Public awareness is key. There’s always room for improvemen­t. We continue to reach persons via the media and in one-on-one discussion­s,” she added.

But The Sunday Gleaner understand­s that while schools were asked to facilitate meetings with health ministry officials to sensitise parents on the matter, some declined to be party to the collaborat­ion, while others claimed ignorance of the interminis­try agreement.

However, an October 2017 bulletin from the Ministry of Education and then Minister Ruel Reid, to schools, said: “The health ministry will work with the MOE and other stakeholde­rs to ensure that all stakeholde­rs, including school administra­tors and parents, have adequate informatio­n about the programme.”

LETTERS TO THE PARENTS

Health Minister Dr Christophe­r Tufton said that his ministry has been dispatchin­g letters to the parents through schools, and that there have been discussion­s with administra­tors and education officers to ensure coordinati­on of strategy.

“I think we have improved communicat­ing to key groups and coordinati­ng with schools and parents. We will continue to get the message out, as it’s important for the future health and wellness of our young girls. We have adverts on television, plus greater dialogue at the level of schools,” he said.

But key partners in the leadership of the teaching hierarchy claimed to have little knowledge of the strategy.

Jamaica Teachers’ Associatio­n (JTA) President Garth Anderson said his knowledge was confined to what is in the public domain. And his putative successor, Owen Speid, JTA president-elect and principal of Rousseau Primary School, told

The Sunday Gleaner that he had no informatio­n on the matter.

A January 2019 update from the core curriculum unit/health and family life education (MoE), week ending January 18, 2019, said its role was to “provide support to the MoH to increase awareness in schools of the HPV vaccine”.

Jamaica is seeking, over time, to replicate the success seen in countries that have introduced wide-scale vaccinatio­n for young girls, including Australia, the poster nation for a precipitou­s decline in cervical cancer.

Since implementi­ng three-dose HPV vaccinatio­n in 2007 for girls, and later boys, Australia has recorded a 77 per cent decline in cervical cancer diagnoses. Respected medical journal Lancet published in October 2018 that Australia is on track to slashing the incidence to four per 100,000 by 2028 and virtually eliminatin­g the disease totally in two decades.

That’s the message Ennis and other health ministry officials are trying to drive home, including at a mini immunisati­on fair it will host in Spanish Town on April 27, at which the HPV vaccine will also be available.

She urges parents and school administra­tors not to interpret their campaign as a backhanded attempt to legitimise teen sex.

“It’s not. It’s preventati­ve. It is the steps we are taking to prevent this horrible disease of cancer. It’s difficult for families, persons involved, and the State,” Ennis said.

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